top | item 22221025 (no title) dsd | 6 years ago I feel like amateur radio is dying not because it's old, but because regulation blocks it from staying new. discuss order hn newest testis321|6 years ago Nah... it's just that we've got flashy new devices to communicate with, and "noone" cares about the old ones.The same thing is happening to every other tech, from IRC to SMS. metaphor|6 years ago > ...regulation blocks it from staying new.What do you mean? brians|6 years ago You’re restricted to relatively narrow bandwidth, and to no crypto. It’s great for experimenting with the radio tech, but not for designing the next WiFi. (But you can use unlicensed spectrum for that) load replies (2) dsd|6 years ago Don't forget about the baud rate limit too. Who likes that?
testis321|6 years ago Nah... it's just that we've got flashy new devices to communicate with, and "noone" cares about the old ones.The same thing is happening to every other tech, from IRC to SMS.
metaphor|6 years ago > ...regulation blocks it from staying new.What do you mean? brians|6 years ago You’re restricted to relatively narrow bandwidth, and to no crypto. It’s great for experimenting with the radio tech, but not for designing the next WiFi. (But you can use unlicensed spectrum for that) load replies (2) dsd|6 years ago Don't forget about the baud rate limit too. Who likes that?
brians|6 years ago You’re restricted to relatively narrow bandwidth, and to no crypto. It’s great for experimenting with the radio tech, but not for designing the next WiFi. (But you can use unlicensed spectrum for that) load replies (2)
testis321|6 years ago
The same thing is happening to every other tech, from IRC to SMS.
metaphor|6 years ago
What do you mean?
brians|6 years ago
dsd|6 years ago